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Buckin' in TOP 30 Albums of Decade - December 24, 2009

An Alternate Take on the Decade’s Best Country Albums

Paul W. Dennis | December 11th, 2009 Email Share

The 9513, Country Universe and (no doubt) other websites and publications are busy finalizing and publishing their Best Albums of the Decade lists. It is, of course an impossible task as there are hundreds of country and bluegrass albums issued each year, amounting to thousands of albums released during the last decade. When we add to that all of the pseudo-country albums (alt-country, Americana, etc.), the number is staggering.

I have listened to only a fraction of those thousands of albums. Some I never had the opportunity to hear, some I avoided because I did not like the singer’s voice (I’d rather hear a good singer sing a mediocre song than hear a mediocre singer sing a good song) and others I may have heard but they left so little impression that I forgot that I heard them. The 9513 took nominations from its various contributors and put together a list of about 250 albums, to which the individual contributor could add and rank additional titles. My own personal top 100 probably includes 25 or so titles that garnered little consideration from the rest of the staff.

This is to be expected since I am The 9513’s oldest contributor. Moreover, I grew up listening to traditional country music, with Hank and Lefty and Ernest Tubb playing on Dad’s record player. I also developed a taste for big band jazz, pop standards and Irish (not Celtic) folk music. My interest in rock ended when rock ‘n roll degenerated into heavy metal, acid rock, punk, etc–I can barely stand Marshall Tucker, and bands such as Lynryd Skynyrd, The Eagles, Kansas and Uncle Tupelo leave me cold. Certainly, this musical background influences my current tastes and preferences.

This is my personal list of the Top 30 country albums of the decade. To read The 9513’s collaborative Top 100 list, click here.

  • Time (2002)Time (2002) – Ray Price

    Both Time and Prisoner of Love (2000) are examples of a master craftsman at work. Ray Price can handle any kind of song, but expressive ballads are his latter-day forte. The title track of Time is one of the most meaningful songs I’ve ever heard:

    Time is a weapon, it’s cold and it’s cruel/It knows no religion and plays by no rules/Time has no conscience, when it’s all said and done/Like a beast in the jungle that devours its young

  • Thanks A Lot (2004)Thanks A Lot (2004) – John England and the Western Swingers

    A western swing tribute to Ernest Tubb was simply an irresistible pairing. The Swingers play well and lend a fresh perspective to the timeless music of Tubb.

  • Kickin' Out The Footlights... Again (2006)Kickin’ Out The Footlights… Again (2006) – George Jones & Merle Haggard

    Haggard sings Jones, Jones sings Haggard, and the pair duets on four tracks to outstanding effect. The two standouts are the Duke Ellington classic “Don’t Get Around Much Any More” and the old Johnny Bond tune “Sick, Sober and Sorry.” I gave a copy of this CD to my friend Tim Donovan (former keyboard player for Molly Hatchet) and he played it constantly for the next six weeks.

     

  • Jumpin' Time (2007)Jumpin’ Time (2007) – The Time Jumpers

    This is how live music should sound. Dawn Sears, one of two female lead vocalists for this group, failed to catch on as a solo act. Why she didn’t remains a mystery to me, as only Connie Smith, Rhonda Vincent and (perhaps) Cia Cherryholmes have comparable pipes.

  • Good Thing Going (2007)Good Thing Going (2007) – Rhonda Vincent

    The fact that Good Thing Going doesn’t appear on The 9513’s Top 100 list is a serious oversight. This album demonstrates why Vincent is the queen of bluegrass, as she delivers a masterful program of ballads and up tempos. I regard “World’s Greatest Fool” as one of the ten or so best songs recorded during the last decade. For whatever reason, the rest of the staff seems to prefer Alison Krauss and Union Station, but in my estimation, all of Rhonda’s albums are better than any of those of AKUS.

  • Kashmere Gardens Mud (2007)Kashmere Gardens Mud (2007) – Johnny Bush

    A very personal album by a singer once labeled “The Country Caruso.” Johnny’s pipes aren’t what they once were, but he’s still an impressive vocalist.

  • Naked Willie (2009)Naked Willie (2009) – Willie Nelson

    Willie’s classic 1960s recordings for RCA stripped of annoying background singers (usually the Anita Kerr Singers) and syrupy string arrangements.

  • American Shadows: The Songs of Moon Mullican (2008)American Shadows: The Songs of Moon Mullican (2008) – Cornell Hurd Band

    Before I die, I’d like to see these guys in live performance. A worthy tribute to a forgotten legend by a band that is second to none in terms of versatility and recorded personality.

  • Come On Back (2005)Come On Back (2005) – Jimmie Dale Gilmore

    Jimmie Dale Gilmore may look like a renegade hippie from the 1960s, but his vocals are pure honky-tonk. This album is a tribute to the music his late father loved. The whole album is excellent but “Walking The Floor Over You” and “Gotta Travel On” are the standout tracks for me.

  • Dwight Sings Buck (2007)Dwight Sings Buck (2007) – Dwight Yoakam

    Dwight issued many good albums during the 00s. For me, this tribute to the Baron of Bakersfield represents an artistic high point as he comes up with fresh interpretations of the undeniable classics of Buck Owens.

  • Buckin' Around (2007)Buckin’ Around (2007) – Jann Browne

    Jann Browne almost made it as a Nashville star, with a pair of Top 20 records in 1989 while with Curb records. I think Jann was a bit too country and a bit too old (35) for a label to give her a major push. This album offers a feminine perspective on Buck Owens’ music; there’s a third Buck Owens tribute album out there, by the Derailers, but so deep is Buck’s catalog that there is little overlap between the three tribute albums.

Paul’s Top 30 Country Albums of the Decade

30. Precious Memories (2006) – Alan Jackson
29. Buckin’ Around (2007) – Jann Browne
28. Cherryholmes (2004) – Cherryholmes
27. Mountain Soul (2001) – Patty Loveless
26. That Lonesome Song (2008) – Jamey Johnson
25. That’s Why I Sing This Way (2005) – Daryle Singletary
24. Roots, Vol. 1 (2001) – Merle Haggard
23. Last Of The Breed (2007) – Ray Price, Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard
22. Dwight Sings Buck (2007) – Dwight Yoakum
21. Come On Back (2005) – Jimmie Dale Gilmore
20. American Shadows: Songs of Moon Mullican (2008) – Cornell Hurd Band
19. Coal (2008) – Kathy Mattea
18. Tough All Over (2005) – Gary Allan
17. American IV: The Man Comes Around (2002) – Johnny Cash
16. Drive (2002) – Alan Jackson
15. Naked Willie (2009) – Willie Nelson
14. Kashmere Gardens Mud (2007) – Johnny Bush
13. 5th Gear (2007) – Brad Paisley
12. O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000) – Various Artists
11. In A Perfect World (2007) – Gene Watson
10. Good Thing Going (2007) – Rhonda Vincent
9. Here Come The Teardrops (2006) – Amber Digby
8. Jumpn’ Time (2007) – Time Jumpers
7. Willie and the Wheel (2009) – Willie Nelson & Asleep at the Wheel
6. Kickin’ Out the Fotlights… Again (2006) – George Jones & Merle Haggard
5. Thanks a Lot (2004) – John England and the Western Swingers
4. Prisoner of Love (2000) – Ray Price
3. Time (2002) – Ray Price
2. You Don’t Know Me: The Songs of Cindy Walker (2006) – Willie Nelson
1. A Taste of the Truth (2009) – Gene Watson

Wrapping up 2009 - December 3, 2009

Hi Everyone-

Sittin' by the fire, thinking about how much has happened since the last entry on this page. Facebook takes up most of my cyber-time, but this site can also be a good place to share my thoughts and news with y'all, so...... I will try to use this as a portal of info for those of you I don 't see on Facebook and MySpace.

Life has definately taken some interesting twists and turns this past year, and hopefully will yield some satisfying musical manifestations in 2010.........

Hope y'all are well and hangin' in there, and hope to see you soon!

Buck Review 10/14/07 - October 22, 2007

latimes.com
Buck Owens
Kari Rene Hall / Los Angeles Times
Country music statesman Buck Owens performing in 1991.
Buck Owens: Gone but not forgotten
Kari Rene Hall / Los Angeles Times
Country music statesman Buck Owens performing in 1991.
Disciples of the late country legend offer tribute albums that channel his songs and spirit yet retain their own artistic flair.
By Randy Lewis, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
October 14, 2007
WHEN Buck Owens died last year at the age of 76, he went out the way most musicians dream about: After eating his favorite dinner (the chicken-fried steak at his own restaurant and nightclub, the Crystal Palace in Bakersfield), he played a gig with his longtime band (the Buckaroos) for an enthusiastic hometown crowd, went home, climbed into bed and never woke up.

That brought to an end a remarkable life that began in the cotton country of northeastern Texas and took him to the pinnacle of international country-music stardom. Along the way he amassed a fortune at one time estimated at more than $100 million, and became a trusted and beloved father figure to a generation of younger musicians

Owens famously advised Garth Brooks during his contract battle with Capitol Records not to relinquish ownership of his master recordings, advice that Brooks wisely, and profitably, took. And when Dwight Yoakam was getting his career off the ground in the mid-'80s, he lobbied Owens to end his self-imposed recording hiatus long enough to join his young acolyte in the studio for a new version of "Streets of Bakersfield," a record that took Yoakam to the No. 1 slot on the country singles chart for the first time, and Owens there for the last.

The loss of this musical paterfamilias is now manifesting itself in tributes to the man who cranked out 90 charted country singles -- 20 of them reaching No. 1 -- over a period of 30 years.

Yoakam's "Dwight Sings Buck" (due Oct. 23, New West Records) is the highest profile of three salutes to the man credited with creating and disseminating the "Bakersfield sound" in country -- a snappy, upbeat counterpoint to the string-heavy style that prevailed in Nashville in the '50s and '60s, the West Coast sound carrying as much rock sting as down-home twang.

The Austin, Texas-based Derailers recently put out "Under the Influence of Buck" with 13 tracks (Palo Duro, www.palodurorecords.com), while Orange County-based country singer-songwriter Jann Browne beat both to the punch earlier this year with "Buckin' Around" (Plan B Records, www.jannbrowne.net) bringing a woman's viewpoint to 11 of Owens' hits.

Because of the depth and breadth of his catalog, it's not surprising that among the collected 39 cuts, only seven songs appear on two of the albums, and just one wound up on all three: "Love's Gonna Live Here," the record that entered the chart in 1963 and stayed at No. 1 for four months, easily Owens' biggest hit. That helped him become the No. 1 country artist of the '60s in terms of his chart numbers, ahead of George Jones, Johnny Cash, Marty Robbins, Loretta Lynn and all the rest.

The Derailers' album is the most conventional, sticking closest to Owens' arrangements and vocal phrasing -- the musical equivalent of a well-lighted photographic portrait. Yoakam and Browne are a bit more painterly, and because Browne is working in another gender universe, she's probably the least beholden to the Owens blueprint. Yet there's no question of her devotion to the California country style built on musical clarity and concise emotional punch.

Where Yoakam and the Derailers both weigh in with committed versions of his heartbreakingly happy ballad "Together Again," Browne makes the canny choice of his witty self-referential follow-up, the 1979 duet with Emmylou Harris, "Play 'Together Again' Again," Browne's time-worn dusky alto playing beautifully off the gravelly tenor of duet partner Chris Gaffney.

Yoakam pushes the envelope furthest in "Only You," a country weeper in Owens' hands, transformed by his disciple into a harrowing psychological journey that's more Roy Orbison by way of David Lynch than chipper ol' Buck. His rendition of Voni Morrison and Johnny Russell's "Act Naturally" splits the difference between Owens' original and the Beatles' breakthrough pop version, and his elastic phrasing on "My Heart Skips a Beat" would surely give the song's composer one of those great ear-to-ear grins.

One of Owens' pet peeves later in life was how slavishly similar he felt mainstream music out of Nashville sounded to him, a byproduct of the same session musicians playing in the same studios for so many different singers. On that front, each of these albums has a refreshingly distinct sonic personality: Yoakam's atmospherically full-bodied, the Derailers' crisply energetic, Browne's affectionately scrappy.

Whether it's reflective of each act's respect for Owens or the inherent vitality of his music, all three tributes channel the spirit Owens consistently invested in his own performances. It's inspiring enough to make your heart skip a beat.

SWALLOWS INN - July 7, 2007

Hey peeps,
We're down at Swallows tonight. (Sat. 7-07-07). We had a great crowd last night...met alot of nice people. We hope y'all come back! The Buckin' Around album is "catchin' on". We appreciate all your support. And HEY...we actually have t-shirts for sale now. Now all we need is some snake oil and we'll be in biz!
Hope you guys are having a great summer. I'm loving the triple digits in the desert! Hope we see you soon!
happy trails
jann

Holly Gleason's YUMMY LIST - June 30, 2007

Buckin' Around Jann Browne
Real honky tonk music is rough around the edges: the beat propulsive in a
way that suggests carnal things, the guitars stinging and acidic and the voices
sand-papered beyond glossy smoothness. Jann Browne doesn't just know these
things, she's lived them -- and that hardworn authenticity makes Buckin'
Around, her tribute to the late great Bakersfield guitar picker and country
singer, that much more potent.
Embracing so many of the standards -- “Love's Gonna Live Here,” “Hot Dog,”
“Waitin' In Your Welfare Line,” “Excuse Me (I Think I've Got A Heartache)”
with a raucous robustness that beats like swingin' doors, Browne enlists
many of Southern Cali's A-Team of honky tonkers (Buck alum Jay Dee Maness,
Desert Rose Bander Bill Bryson, Haggard vet Scott Joss and worldclass girl singers
Iris DeMent and Joy Lynn White) for a tribute that is unabashedly “Hell,
YEAH!” Her “Play Together Again, Again” is a joyous sound -- redolent of the
huge emotions that make jukebox sob-standards so addicting, while “Loose Talk”
is the canny wordplay that's easily missed when embracing this sorta music
as pure hick, no waiting.

San Jose Mercury News REVIEW - April 10, 2007

DISCPICK

Jann Browne
"Buckin' Around'
Plan B Records
$14.99 at www.jannbrowne.net 3 stars


One of the very few good reasons to live in Orange County , Ca. is the chance it gives you to catch Jann Browne, a criminally underappreciated country-style singer and songwriter who lives and plays there. After a
stint with Asleep at the Wheel and a couple of solo albums for the Curb label, she released one of the great overlooked CDs of the '90s, an indie (still available) called "Count Me In,'' before bad business deals shunted her off to the side for a while.

She has stepped back in with "Buckin' Around,'' 11 songs by Buck Owens, one of her big influences. One can't help but wish for another collection of her own songs (especially those as good as "Hearts on the Blue Train'' and "Dear Loretta'' from "Count Me In''), but in the meantime, as tributes go, this one's solid.

She still has a classic country voice, real sweet and engaging, with just enough tequila and tobacco around the edges. Matt Barnes' assured guitar work is every bit as impressive as he leads a band that includes Merle Haggard sideman Scott Joss and ex-Buck sideman Jay
Dee Maness. Iris DeMent, Joy Lynn White and Chris Gaffney add guest vocals.

The song selection is another plus: Browne wisely avoided making this yet another Buck's Greatest Hits package (though she did include "Waitin' in Your Welfare Line,'' "I Don't Care'' and the especially wonderful "Love's Gonna Live Here''). Instead, she left room for less familiar numbers that demonstrate the man's range, from the teary "Play Together Again Again'' to the loping, Sleepy LaBeef-esque "Playboy'' to the rollicking ""Hot Dog.''

It's all good. Too bad it's so short (not quite 28 minutes;
some of the songs seem to be over before they start). More, Jann, more! And not just more Buck, great as he certainly was and is. Next time, how 'bout more you?


- Tony Lioce,
San Jose Mercury News

Buckin Around text corrections - April 5, 2007

Hi Everybody!
In our haste to stay on our release schedule, we overlooked the final text proof from the manufacturer-OUR FAULT-NOT THEIRS...we actually had sent it, but we OK'd the wrong proof. We've had stickers made and are putting them on all the CDs now- But some of you who purchased the CD earlier,won't have these corrections.Anyway, SORRY,, and here are the corrections:
1) on the song,"Hot Dog", Skip Edwards played that hot B-3 Hammond Organ part.
2) Song Writers besides Buck are as follows:
song#2 "Before You Go"written by Buck and Don Rich.
song#3 "Excuse Me" written by Buck and Harlan Howard.
song#4 "play Together Again, Again" written by Buck and C Stewart and J Abott.
song#6 "Think Of Me" written by Don Rich annd Estella Olson.
song#7 "Loose Talk" written by A Lucas and F Hart.
song#8 "Hot Dog" written by Buck and J Dedmond.
song#10 "Welfare Line" written by Buck and Don Rich and N Stuckey.
song #11 "PlayGirl" written by B Morris and E Miller.

Again, Sorry for the Text gliches- we spent all of our time on the MUSIC, and didn't proof the liner well enough.
If you want the sticker for your CD, we will send you one.
THANK YOU ALL for the GREAT response we have been recieving!!

BUCKIN AROUND Official release date, 3/25/07 - March 21, 2007

plan B records!

ADVANCE CD ENCLOSED
Artist: Jann Browne
Album Title: Buckin' Around
Producer: Matt Barnes
Record Label: plan B records!
Street Date: March 25, 2007

‘Buckin’ Around’

West Coast Country Artist Jann Browne
Pays Anniversary Tribute to Legend Buck Owens

LAGUNA HILLS, CA – MARCH 25, 2007 – plan B records! with west coast Gold Record songwriter/ artist Jann Browne today released Buckin’ Around – a masterful and heart-felt tribute to the late Buck Owens on the first anniversary of the legend’s death. This year also marks the 50th anniversary of Buck’s first record contract.

“I have been a lover and listener of Buck’s music for as long as I can remember, and I miss him,” said Jann. “Buck and I first met at the CMA Awards in 1991, but my ears met him long before that. I just wanted to honor a great pioneer of country music, and introduce a female perspective to his songs.”

Buck died on March 25, 2006, after dedicating more than 50 years of his life to country music. Songs on the CD include, “Love’s Gonna Live Here”, “Think of Me”, “Loose Talk” and “Sweethearts In Heaven” – all hits by Buck over the years.

With a Gold Record on her wall, several radio hits, and a number one nationwide video under her belt, Jann said she wanted to pay tribute to one of the country world’s most influential pioneers. Jann climbs aboard the Buck songtrain with as much conviction and heart as she has on her previous 5 albums. She sings it like she’s lived with it inside her for all these years, and this is a great CD in it’s own right.
Joining Jann on ‘Buckin’ Around’ are Jay Dee Maness, Buck’s one-time steel player, Bill Bryson from the Desert Rose Band, Scott Joss from Merle Haggard’s band and critically acclaimed Joy Lynn White and Iris Dement.
Jann is a real west coast girl, and this is some real west coast twang.

For more information, please contact: plan B records! www.planbrecords.com Matt Barnes (949) 472-0999 www.matthew@jannbrowne.net
plan B records!
23011 MOULTON PKWY SUITE i-1
L A G U N A H I L L S CA 92653
TELEPHONE / FAX: 949 472 0999

STUFF - January 8, 2007

Ok...hopefully you're sitting in a chair right now with a hot toddy of some sort being relieved the holidays are over! I had a great time...hope you did too. I'm sitting in Palm Springs right now beneath a brilliant sun enjoying a latte. I'm hoping it's a great year to look forward to. May it be the same for you as well!
But now it's time to crack the whip and get back to work.
The album is at the point of sloooooowly becoming an album. A few glitches here and there that we're having to deal with but nothing major. It seems that when a project is nearing its completion, the little things come to the forefront that you forgot about or just ain't quite right. But...soon my pretty...soon. Matt and Ian have been working tirelessly on mixing and mastering. After those things are finished, we need to sit and listen for a few days and make sure all the t's are crossed and i's are dotted.

We're working on getting a "store" as well. So we can have those things requested such as autographed pictures, t shirts, hats etc. So we appreciate your patience. We're just musicians trying to get it all done.
Cheers to 2007!
jann

HAPPY HOLIDAYS - November 29, 2006

Just wanted to check in and wish all of you the happiest of holidays. I'm sure you'll all be hustling and bustling before long. We're still working on the new album. Just a few odds and ends left to do before we finish mixing and mastering. We appreciate your patience!
Hey, also thanks for all the email you've been sending. I enjoy reading your thoughts!
Anyone got a cool Holiday story to share?
Merry Christmas,
jann

it's almost time to be Buckin' Around! - November 2, 2006

Whew ...we made it thru October. Never has been my favorite month, but hey...I'm just happy to be here.
Just wanted to remind all of you that our new album is getting "seamed up" pretty nicely. Soon, we'll start mixing and hope to have it completed by early December.
We have a few nice surprises on there...a couple of guest stars here and there...some of my favorite singers.
This is a tribute album to Buck Owens. I cut my teeth on his music as many other artists have. I also had the pleasure of hanging out with him a couple of times. Always a gentleman with me...always a positive uplifting "fatherly" kind of man. So many of his albums were in my mom's record collection as I was growing up. She always had a "thing" for those west coast artists. I guess it rubbed off. I remember sitting on the front porch swing when I was a kid in Georgetown, Kentucky. My mom had a guitar so I was sitting there trying to figure out how to play, first the guitar, and secondly, Love's Gonna Live Here. Well I didn't master the guitar but I did figure out the song on ukelele. Been doing it ever since. I've always weaved Buck songs into my club days and concert days here and there.
My mom has often told the story of seeing the Buckaroos in Lexington, Ky. and hiding behind a bush and waiting for Don Rich to come out after the concert. Ha...my mom the stalker! She planted one on them right then and there. Yes, my mom kissed Don Rich...and I kissed Buck. Must still be rubbing off. Anyway...thanks mom for those countless hours of Buck and Don on the stereo. And thanks to all of you anxiously awaiting this Cd.
jb

corkys3313.blogspot.com - October 27, 2006

Sunday, October 08, 2006
THE MOON IS A HARSH MISTRESS

Three great albums you’ve probably never heard

All three albums under this topic are by female artists. I didn’t plan it this way, but there is probably something at work here. I’m guessing that it has to do with emotions. Guys seem more concerned about getting a riff out there than expressing some deeply felt emotion. These gals view the world as a bigger place and want their feelings known. Set to these tunes and rhymes, I’m all ears when it comes to these albums.




JANN BROWNE - MISSED ME BY A MILE

This was Browne’s fourth, and most recent solo album. Recorded in 2001 she decided to shake loose of expectations and go her own way with this one. She had made other solo albums that were pleasant and her stint with Asleep At The Wheel took her to places she might never have been invited. But something was in the air when it came time for this one. Perhaps inspired by what Rosanne Cash, Lucinda Williams other female artists were producing she took the reins and didn’t stray from the path so much as forge her own.

If a single song is worth whatever someone is charging for the entire disc then the title track here is one of them. The perception and skill to which she spins the yarn of a former lover and what exactly separates them borders on jaw dropping. This is a five minute life lesson that you can have for the price a disc instead of expensive counseling. The gritty delivery also lets you know that the message is one that she’s been contemplating.

Putting this disc out on her own with no major label backing doomed this one as far as substantial sales. But, if you measure success by satisfaction with the finished product then this one is headed for the hall of fame.

Jann's Birthday! - March 12, 2006

Hi people-
Matt here..... I just want those of you who don't already know, Jann's birthday is Tuesday, March 14th!
ALLRIGHT !
( wonder if it will be in "USA Today" again this year? ) lol

TELL ME WHY - March 9, 2006

We've been getting countless requests for Jann's first CD, "Tell Me Why". It's now available for downloading at www.itunes.com

Our last CD is available - February 5, 2006

We've had numerous requests for our last CD, "Missed Me By A Mile". You can get one at various online CD stores, Including CD Baby (click on our "links") and Village Records. OR....... you can go to iTunes and various other digital music sites and download individual songs!
Just go to the itunes homepage and type Jann Browne into the "search" box.

New CD in the Works - February 5, 2006

Hi everyone-
Our new Studio,"The Barn" is up and running. For anyone who is interested, most barns in Southern CA are actually warehouse spaces in business parks; and so is this barn..... inside we have a Pro Tools rig w/ a Mac G-5, Lynx converters,semi-integrated with our analog 32 channel Soundcraft 800 B (because Ian loves sitting at a big console!), and some great outboard gear like a Groove Tubes VIPRE tube pre, and a Glory Comp, and some new DBX stuff we picked up at the NAMM show. Add that to a decent collection of mics and other goodies and a nice sized tracking room, "The Barn" has become "our studio".



Also, soon we will be selling CDs, Tee Shirts and Snake Oil from this site, and we're really sorry it has taken this long, but "Damn it Jim, we're musicians, not web hosts!"

Happy Holidays - December 13, 2005

Well if you're anything like me this month, you're chasing yourself just to catch up. Honestly, I feel like I'm in a Looney Tune adventure. The holidays are always crazy, not only because of the 10 billion extra things that need to be done, but because there are alot of pets needing tending to. That being said, I'm not going to let it get past me without drinking an eggnog or two, without letting people in my life know how important they are, without thanking God for His blessings, without enjoying the Christmas lights in the neighborhood, without writing a Christmas song that has had a title for 3 years now, without singing a few holiday songs, nor without hanging with my closest friends and family. You are in the mix as well. I want to thank you all for your love and your kindness and for not losing sight of me. And though it's a busy time, pat Fido or kitty on the head a few extra times just because...
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
jann

I'm back - November 6, 2005

Yes, I will admit to a looooong sabbatical but it's good to be back amongst you rebellious music lovers.
If I were going to leave my personal life out of the mix, I'd have little to write about. So let's just say I've been busy working on different aspects of my life, emotionally, mentally, and physically. For the most part, I'm happy and yet sad enough to hopefully write the next wrist-slasher. (You know how country music is.). I haven't stopped playing around Southern Cal and I've continued to write about all this junk around me and in me.
I've been spending a great deal of time in the mojave desert these days. Eventually the desert will be my permanent home. I am solar powered (as my girlfriend from Cleveland says). I can never get enough sun or turquoise western skies. But I can do without the wind tunnel...makes for a bad hair day!
I continue to work with animals , (my favorite people). I started a petsitting business several years ago which certainly turned my internal clock upside down for awhile. Getting up at 5am isn't easy for a working musician. But I really do love it! We recently performed at a fundraiser for D.A.W.G. (Dedicated Animals Welfare Group) in Mission Viejo, Ca. Not only do they have local animals they provide for, but sheltered animals after Hurricane Katrina. You can visit them at www.dawg.org. I say kudos to them and all of you that contribute to our fur friends.
There are still alot of people in my life that I've met while on tour or in local clubs that I am eternally grateful for. Some are people whom have just assumed that I would always be in music and those who have literally had to push my ass up the mountain. I call them good friends. At any rate, I'm here, singing sometimes, writing alot. I hope you'll stay tuned for the next album which we should begin recording soon. The new studio is up and running, thanks to Matt and Ian, and SO AM I.
We'll soon get a handle on this website and put some pics up and anything else you'd like to musically hear or see. Let us know. Drop a line when you can.
Let's get started...
jann

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